现代大学英语听力2Unit 9.doc
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1、如有侵权,请联系网站删除,仅供学习与交流现代大学英语听力2Unit 9【精品文档】第 8 页Task 11) Man: I had the girls running in circles when I was in college. Woman: I never knew you were the campus hero. Man: I wasnt. I was the womens track coach. 2) Instructor: Mr. Jenkins, why are you late? Student: I guess because the class started bef
2、ore I got here. 3) Woman: Doctor, you have to come immediatelymy baby swallowed some camera film! Doctor: Just calm yourself, nothing will develop. 4) Customer: Waiter, this water is cloudy. Waiter: The waters okay, madam. Its just that the glass is a little dirty. 5) Woman: The bride wears white on
3、 her wedding day as a symbol of happiness, for this is the most joyous day in her entire life. Man: Why does the groom wear black? Task 2Catherine: I think firstly I find the French language, very melodic to listen to. Its very easy on the ear, and it almost sounds poetic. No matter what kind of moo
4、d the individual is in, whos talking, or what theyre talking about, there seems to be a rhythm to the language. And its rounded; there are no sharp, jagged edges to the language, so its very pleasing to the ear. Chris: I think the accent I really like is the Dane speaking English. They sound awful w
5、hen they speak Danish, but when they speak English theres a beautiful, low, sensitive, very soft quality about it. Donald: I like the way they bring their French pronunciation into English. They cant pronounce hs and they cant pronounce th properly. And I think that actually sounds very nice. Also I
6、 like the rhythm they bring French rhythms into Englishnice, steady rhythms and I like that too. Its just it, it. whenever I hear a French person speaking English it sounds more gentle and more lyrical. Lesley: I think the most attractive foreign accents for me are Mediterranean accents because they
7、, if you like, import their own culture into the English accent and give it a lot of life that sometimes, that kind ofthe gestures and everything that the English people dont have, so you get a beautiful mixture of the serious Northern European and the Southern European together. Susan: I like the S
8、wedish accent because it, it makes me smile and the way its spoken is so sing-songy that you cant help but smile when other people actually speak it. And it always makes you want to try and put the accent on yourself. Task 3The spelling and meaning of words are very interesting. But whats more inter
9、esting is the history of a word, or where it came from. Lets examine some of the words and see how they got into our language. LUNCH Lunch perhaps comes from an old Spanish word lonje, a slab of ham. We may also get our word from a form of lump, maybe a lump of bread, but whether lunch comes from ha
10、m or bread, it meant a hunk of something to eat. ATLAS An atlas is a strong man, and also a book of maps. The story of this word begins a long time ago in Greece. The ancient Greeks believed that their gods had once been a race of giants called Titans. The Titans fought with another group of gods ca
11、lled Olympians, and the Olympians won. Atlas was a Titan. He was punished for fighting by having to stand at the western edge of the world, holding the sky on his head and hands, so that it would not fall on the world and smash anything. After the ancient Greek religion died out, the idea of Atlas c
12、hanged. From holding up the sky with his head and hands, he came to be thought of as holding the world on his shoulders. Mercator, a mapmaker of the sixteenth century, used a picture of Atlas on the cover of a book of maps, so a book of maps came to be called an atlas. The word has still another mea
13、ning. The top bone of the neck is called atlas because it supports the head. GOOD-BYE Good-bye is a blessing; originally it was God be with ye, and in the course of time it became one word. Many of our greetings are good wishes, but we say them with so little thought that we forget this. When we say
14、 good morning, good evening, good night, and so on, what we are really saying is, I hope you will have a good morning (or evening, or night). DAISY The daisy has a little golden eye, like a tiny sun. Perhaps this is the reason the English people named it days eye, or perhaps they chose the name beca
15、use the English daisy closes at night. The English loved their daisies, which were pink and red, as well as white. Six hundred years or so ago, the English poet Chaucer said: The daisy, or else the eye of the day, The queen, and prettiest flower of all.Task 4Mathew: Chris, why is it that there are s
16、o many different languages, and that in Europe certainly if you travel more than a hundred miles, youre likely to find people speaking a completely different language to your own. Chris: Well, its true to say that there are hundreds and hundreds of different languages. Its perhaps. however, more int
17、eresting and more informative to say that there are several different groups of languages. Most European languages, with the exception of I think Finnish and Basque and Hungarian, I believe, belong to the Indo-European group of languages. Im not so very sure myself of the actual details of the histo
18、ry of these languages, but you can be very sure that most of these languages, say, Latin and Greek and our own language and German and French and all the others, are connected. The reason why you can travel from one village to another in Switzerland and from one area to another in England and find d
19、ifferent dialects, if not different languages spoken, is that several hundred years ago communication was by word of mouth. Word of mouth meant that people had to move; if people were to move they needed roads and there were no roads. Mathew: Do you see any chance for a universal language like Esper
20、anto? Chris: Not for an artificial language, no. I suppose the Roman Catholic Church used Latin, but Latin had a particular religious basis and this is probably why it was therefore chosen. I dont see very much chance for Esperanto; I think its an awfully good idea but I dont believe that language w
21、orks like that. I think people will probably work towards the most convenient language to use. They will not set out to learn a new language. It seems to me that we, either English, Russian or Chinese, perhaps Japanese, will be the languages of the future. My bets on English. Mathew: Maggie, why do
22、you think it is that so few English people speak a second language? Maggie: I think when you learn a language at school, it tends to be rather a dead occupation, and its very difficult to stimulate any interest among school children. But when you actually go to the country and you spend, say a month
23、 when in an exchange visit when youre a schoolgirl, or a schoolboy, then you suddenly become more interested because you want to communicate with people when youre actually abroad, and its not safe to rely on the fact that most people speak English when in foreign countries. I think English people t
24、raditionally thought that foreigners always spoke English, and a lot of foreigners do, but there are people that you meet in the street or you want to take a bus somewhere, then you find that you need to speak the language and its very unnerving to be in a situation where you cant communicate with p
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